Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are changing the traditional health care model and redefining personalized health. ICTs offer effective communication and real-time monitoring of ...patients and provide additional data to support clinical decision-making, improve the quality of care, and contribute to the empowerment of patients. However, evidence on the use of ICTs and digital preferences of immune-mediated inflammatory disease (IMID) patients is scarce. The aim of this study is to describe the degree of use of ICTs in patients with IMIDs (including rheumatic diseases, inflammatory bowel diseases, and psoriasis), identify their needs, and analyze their interest in the use of apps as tools for better management of their disease. A questionnaire was created by a multidisciplinary team including pharmacists, rheumatologists, gastroenterologists, dermatologists, and nurses with experience in ICTs applied to the field of IMID. The survey included 27 questions organized into 3 blocks: (1) sociodemographic characteristics, (2) ICT use for health-related information, and (3) patient expectations about mobile health. A total of 472 questionnaires were analyzed. Overall, 52.9% (250/472) of patients were diagnosed with a rheumatologic disease, 39.4% (186/472) with inflammatory bowel disease, and 12.3% (58/472) with psoriasis. The state of health was considered good by 45.6% (215/472) of patients. Patients were interested in staying informed about health issues in 86.9% (410/427) of cases and sought health-related information mainly from the internet (334/472, 70.8%) and health care professionals (318/472, 67.4%). Overall, 13.6% (64/472) did not trust the health information they found in internet. Of the patients, 42.8% (202/472) had a health app, and 42.2% (199/472) had found it on their own. Patients would like a health app to help mainly to manage appointments (281/472, 59.5%), obtain information about their diseases and treatments (274/472, 58.1%), and get in contact with health professionals (250/472, 53.0%). Overall, 90.0% (425/472) of patients reported they would use an app to manage their IMID if their health professional recommended it, and 58.0% (274/472) would pay or probably be willing to pay for it. IMID patients were very interested in finding health-related information via ICTs, especially using smartphones and apps recommended by health professionals. Appointment management, advice on disease and treatment management, and personalized communication with health professionals were the most desired app features identified. Health professionals should play an essential role in recommending and validating these tools to ensure they are of high quality.
Purpose
To determine the effects of intravitreal atropine on scleral growth in the form‐deprived chick as an experimental model of myopia.
Methods
Five groups of five chicks were studied from day ...0–12 post‐hatching. One group remained untreated (C), and four were form‐deprived by monocular light diffusers to induce myopia. Two groups (RL and A) wore diffusers for 9 days, and the other two groups (D and D + A) wore diffusers throughout the study. Group D received no further treatment (myopia positive control). Groups A and D + A received intravitreal injections of atropine for days 9–12. Measurements of refractive error and axial length were performed on days 0, 9, and 12. Sclera changes were assessed in cartilaginous and fibrous layers by histological analysis.
Results
All form‐deprived eyes had a myopic refractive error on day 9. All atropine‐treated groups were hyperopic on day 12. The effect of atropine was most evident in Group D + A in which diffusers were maintained throughout treatment and changes in refractive error were statistically significant. The observed changes in axial length were in line with the changes in refractive error. The scleral fibrous layer thickness increased, and the sceral cartilaginous layer underwent a slight thinning compared to Group D, the myopia positive control.
Conclusions
If the signals that induce growth remain during atropine treatment, morphological changes in sclera are produced: the scleral fibrous layer thickened, and the sceral cartilaginous layer thinned. These changes resulted in refractive error recovery, and the ocular growth was stopped. The data suggested the atropine was acting throughout the scleral fibrous layer.
To study corneal wound healing after two cross-linking techniques using either rose bengal and green light (RGX) or the conventional treatment using riboflavin and UVA radiation (UVX).
Corneas of New ...Zealand rabbits were monolaterally treated with UVX (21 eyes) or RGX (25 eyes). Treatments involved corneal de-epithelialization (8-mm diameter), soaking with photosensitizer (0.1% riboflavin in 20% dextran for 30 minutes for UVX; 0.1% rose bengal for 2 minutes for RGX), and light irradiation (370 nm, 3 mW/cm2, 30 minutes for UVX; 532 nm, 0.25 W/cm2, 7 minutes for RGX). Contralateral eyes were used as controls. Clinical follow-up included fluorescein staining, haze measurement, and pachymetry. Healing events analyzed after euthanasia at 2, 30, and 60 days included cell death (TUNEL assay), cell proliferation (BrdU bromodeoxyuridine immunofluorescence), and differentiation to myofibroblasts (α-SMA alpha smooth muscle actin immunohistochemistry).
Re-epithelialization and pachymetries were similar after RGX and UVX. The haze from day 1 to 15 was greater after UVX. Cell death was deeper after UVX, being localized in the anterior and middle stroma, and was superficial (anterior third) after RGX. Cell proliferation appeared after 2 days and was localized in the middle and posterior stroma in the UVX group but was superficial in the RGX group. After 60 days the number of stromal cells had not returned to the control number in either group.
The deeper and longer-lasting cell damage caused by UVX compared to RGX may underlie the slower cell repopulation after UVX and other differences in healing. Shallower damage and a shorter treatment time suggest that RGX may be appropriate for stiffening thin corneas.
To evaluate corneal wound healing after treatment with a new collagen crosslinking protocol using rose bengal dye and green light (RGX).
One cornea of 20 New Zealand rabbits was de-epithelialized ...(DE) in an 8-mm diameter circle and, in another group (n = 25), the DE corneas were then stained with 0.1% rose bengal for 2 minutes and exposed to green light (532 nm) for 7 minutes (RGX). The contralateral eyes without treatment acted as controls. The animals were clinically followed including fluorescein staining and pachymetry. Healing events were analyzed after euthanasia at 2, 30, and 60 days. Cell death (TUNEL assay), cell proliferation (5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine incorporation), and cell differentiation to myofibroblasts (α-SMA labeling) were carried out. In addition, loss of keratocytes and subsequent repopulation of the corneal stroma were quantified on hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections.
Wound closure was slower after RGX (4.4 days) then after DE (3.3 days). Cell death was restricted to the anterior central stroma, and the cellular decrease did not differ significantly between RGX and DE corneas. Cell proliferation in the epithelium and stroma appeared at 2 days. In both DE and RGX corneas, recovery of the epithelium was complete at day 30, although cell repopulation of the stroma was not complete at 60 days.
The healing response in corneas after RGX is very similar to that observed after DE alone, suggesting that, along with its short treatment time and limited effect on keratocytes, RGX displays good potential for clinical cornea stiffening.
To compare corneal biomechanical properties after in vivo and ex vivo cross-linking (CXL) using rose bengal-green light (RGX) or riboflavin-UVA (UVX).
Corneas of 30 rabbits were treated in vivo by ...the two CXL modalities monolaterally (Group 1) or bilaterally (Group 2). Rabbits in Group 1 were euthanized 1 month after treatments and in Group 2 two months after treatment. Ex vivo CXL was also performed. Eyes were measured by Scheimpflug air puff corneal deformation imaging (Corvis ST) under constant IOP. Corneal deformation parameters were assessed. Inherent corneal biomechanical properties were estimated using inverse finite element modeling.
Peak to peak distance decreased 16% 2 months after RGX, and 4% and 20% 1 and 2 months after UVX, respectively. The equivalent Young's modulus (Eeq) increased relative to the control during the post treatment period for both RGX and UVX. The Eeq increased by factors of 3.4 (RGX) and 1.7 (UVX) 1 month and by factors of 10.7 (RGX) and 7.3 (UVX) 2 months after treatment. However, the Eeq values for ex vivo CXL were much greater than produced in vivo. The ex vivo Eeq was greater than the 1-month in vivo values by factors of 8.1 (RGX) and 9.1 (UVX) and compared with 2 month by factors of 2.5 (RGX) and 2.1 (UVX).
These results indicate that corneal stiffness increases after CXL, and further increases as a function of time after both RGX and UVX. Also, while biomechanical properties determined after ex vivo CXL are indicative of corneal stiffening, they may not provide entirely accurate information about the responses to CXL in vivo.
To compare the clinical and histological outcomes after intrastromal corneal ring segment (ICRS) implantation with and without plasma rich in growth factors (PRGF) in an experimental animal model.
...First, the toxicity of PRGF was tested in hen's keratocyte cultures. Then, an animal model with 18 hens was randomly divided into 2 groups. In the first group, one ICRS was implanted in each eye (ICRS group). In the second group, the ICRS was firstly immersed 30 min in PRGF-Endoret solution, then implanted and, finally, PRGF-Endoret was inoculated into the channel (PRGF-ICRS group). Animals of each group were also separated into 3 groups regarding the time they were sacrificed, and corneal tissue was fixed for histological analysis at 2, 7 and 30 days. Cell death was detected by terminal uridine nick end labelling (TUNEL) assay. Proliferation was labelled by 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation and myofibroblast differentiation by alpha-smooth muscle actin (αSMA) immunodetection. Clinical examination, analyzing epithelial wound closure, deposits and stromal haze, was carried out at the different study times.
No toxic effect was observed by PRGF in hen stromal cell cultures. Clinically, in PRGF-ICRS corneas at 7 days, there were more deposits with higher intensity than in ICRS group. Histologically, at day 2 there was less epithelial damage over the segment in the PRGF-ICRS group, corneal oedema around the segment disappeared earlier and, at day 7, there was also double the number of cells around the segment than in the ICRS group displaying different morphologies. The number of TUNEL-positive cells was statistically higher in the PRGF-ICRS group at 7 and 30 days, and the number of BrdU-positive cells was statistically higher at all analyzed times. However, there were no differences in the number of αSMA-positive cells at 30 days between both groups.
The ICRS immersion in PRGF-Endoret prior and after to its corneal implantation, in an experimental animal model, enhances clinical deposits and histological cell turnover without increasing myofibroblast differentiation reducing stromal wound-healing time after surgery.
Purpose
To evaluate corneal wound healing in the hen animal model after additive surgery with an intracorneal ring segment (ICRS).
Methods
We implanted one ICRS in each eye of 76 hens. In control ...group 1 (n = 22 hens), the stromal channel was prepared but no ICRS was inserted. In control group 2 (n = 2 hens), no surgery was performed. Animals were randomly separated into groups and euthanized after clinical follow-up of 4 and 12 hours, 1, 2, 3, and 7 days, and 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 months. Corneas were stained with hematoxylin-eosin. Apoptosis was measured by terminal uridine nick end-labeling assays. Cell proliferation and myofibroblast-like differentiation were assayed by BrdU and α-smooth muscle actin immunofluorescence microscopy. Stromal matrix changes were documented by electron microscopy.
Results
Epithelial and stromal cell apoptosis around the ICRS-implanted and control group 1 eyes peaked at 12 hours, but continued for 72 hours. In ICRS-implanted eyes, epithelial and stromal proliferation was present at 12 and 24 hours, respectively, and peaked at 7 days and 72 hours, respectively. Some proliferation in the ICRS-implanted group continued through the 6-month follow-up, and myofibroblast-like cells differentiated one to three months after ICRS implantation. The segments rotated within the stroma as the limbal inferior angle approached the epithelium.
Conclusions
Wound healing after ICRS implantation in hen corneas was similar to that of other corneal surgical wounds in stages. However, there were some specific features related to the small size of the epithelial wound and the device permanently implanted inside the cornea.
To evaluate the outcomes of implanting a 150° arc-length intrastromal corneal ring segment (ICRS) using a femtosecond laser in patients with post-LASIK ectasia throughout a 5-year follow-up period.
...This study enrolled 45 eyes of 45 patients diagnosed with post-LASIK ectasia who underwent a 150° arc-length Ferrara-type ICRS implantation. The uncorrected (UDVA) and corrected (CDVA) distance visual acuities, residual refractive errors, and root mean square (RMS) for coma-like aberration were evaluated preoperatively and at 6-, 12-, 36, and 60 months postoperatively.
Mean UDVA (logMAR) ameliorated from 0.53 ± 0.33 preoperatively to 0.26 ± 0.24 at 6 months postoperatively (p < 0.0001). Mean CDVA improved from 0.12 ± 0.13 to 0.04 ± 0.06 (p < 0.0001). Mean UDVA and CDVA remained stable throughout the 5-year follow-up (p > 0.1). No eyes lost lines of CDVA at any follow-up visit compared to preoperatively, and most eyes gained lines. The eyes with a refractive cylinder ≤ 2.00 D varied from 26.7% preoperatively to more than 75% at all postoperative follow-up visits. The maximum keratometry was significantly flattened (p < 0.0001), and the RMS for corneal coma-like aberration was halved (p < 0.0001). 93.3% of the eyes did not show signs of disease progression or regression of the visual or refractive outcomes at any follow-up visits.
These results suggest that implanting a single 150° arc-length Ferrara-type ICRS is a safe, effective and stable procedure for visual restoration in post-LASIK ectasia. In very few cases, visual and/or refractive instability was experienced throughout the follow-up.
There are many medicinal products that, although having shown efficacy and safety in different ophthalmological indications, they are not authorized or commercially available for ophthalmic ...administration. This implies, on one hand, that they must be used according to legislation that regulates the availability of medicines in special situations and, on the other hand, that they must be prepared in the pharmacy services for ophthalmic administration, according to quality criteria to ensure its effectiveness, stability and sterility. This document gathers the consensus between the Spanish Society of Ophthalmology and the Spanish Society of Hospital Pharmacy about these selected preparations which have shown enough evidence in their efficacy and safety for their ophthalmic use (off label) and ophthalmic administration. This document includes recommendations about its use according to the current legislation. In addition, with the aim of harmonizing the preparation of intraocular injections in the hospital pharmacy services, general recommendations are set in this document to ensure the compliance with standards established in the Spanish Guideline for Good Preparation Practices of Medicinal Products in Hospital Pharmacies. These recommendations include sections such as the area of preparation, material, technique, packaging, stability, quality control, prescription and traceability of intraocular preparations.